> To paraprase Churchhill: Schools are lousy ecosystems for learning but > we haven't found any practical better systems yet. > > How successful has the OLPC-project actually been? Any evidence beyond > quotes and ideas from SciFi "The diamond age" ;-) ? > > Cheers > > Christian > > > You bring up a good point: home schooling is actually verboten in some countries. Including in Germany? Really? I didn't know that.
The late Arthur Siegel used to post eloquently on this list about how 14 year olds stand to benefit much more from activities *not* involving a computer. Riding a bicycle for example. But then having a smartphone talking in your helmet about which way to turn, especially in a strange city... But then who's in a strange city at 14 one may ask. Well, many 14 year olds don't know their own city. Learning local geography is a worthy goal, with an eye to mastery and getting around autonomously. If computers (including smartphones) might help with that, so much the better. OLPC: I'm not expert. I think many children have been grateful for these electronics but not many were reached compared to the number who might have enjoyed the boost. A drop in the bucket. The common wisdom about OLPC is it helped some kids, plus Sugar Labs and the hardware design teams, reaped substantial benefits in terms of getting to prototype tomorrow's "best of breed" technologies. >From my point of view if you have a safe "home alone" environment then great: problem solved in your case. Given the number of homeless runaways not seeing a safe study space anywhere on the horizon, the work for NGOs I support is ongoing. If governments are in any position to assist with high tech, then lets think of high tech as more than a laptop. It's a safe personal workspace. Schools fit the bill if they give students space to be individuals with private space and time. Some do. Many don't see that as their role. Many are more like prisons which specialize in "all or nothing" i.e. you're either never alone, or you're in solitary. I'm not looking for those extremes for average work / study students just seeking better lives for themselves. Kirby
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